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Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Eakin Park project raises concerns about threat to frogs

Preparation for a construction project near the pond in Eakin Park in Annandale has raised alarm bells that the frogs who breed in a vernal pool nearby might be danger.

Gary Rubin, who lives near Eakin Park, says his children enjoy watching the frogs and tadpoles in the shallow pool, which is between the pond and the Cross County Trail by the Tobin Road entrance. When Park Authority workers began stationing large piles of dirt around the pool in recent weeks, he became concerned that they were getting ready to fill in the pool to prevent flooding on the trail.

Dirt piles near the vernal pool.

Rubin reached out to the Park Authority and Providence supervisor’s office to try to find out what was going on and urge them to save the tadpole habitat. There are lots of frogs living in the pond,he says, but use the vernal pool for breeding because it’s protected from predators.

Several days later he received a response from Mark Pourde, the Park Authority’s Area 2 manager, who provided assurance that there are no plans to fill in the pool.

The purpose of the project under way “is to maintain the hydrology on the east side of the Cross County Trail (CCT) so that it doesn’t continue to flood the trail after large rain events,” Pourde says. “To do this, we plan a combination of activities, such as managing the pond’s water level; creating a short, temporary berm directly adjacent to the trail that should be no more than two to three feet wide on the trail’s east side; and establish drainage to the existing culvert that crosses the CCT and carries the outflow from the pond.”

Jan. 16 - Annual Give Together, a family volunteer event on the Martin Luther King National Day of Service, Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia, three shifts (9:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., and 1:30 p.m.). Sign up with Volunteer Fairfax. 703-246-3828,